Halpern v. Gozan

85 Misc. 2d 753, 381 N.Y.S.2d 744, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2053
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 85 Misc. 2d 753 (Halpern v. Gozan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Halpern v. Gozan, 85 Misc. 2d 753, 381 N.Y.S.2d 744, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2053 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

Leonard Leigh Finz, J.

The issue raised in this medical malpractice action is whether subdivision 8 of section 148-a of the Judiciary Law (hereinafter referred to as the "new law”) signed into law on July 1, 1975 is violative of the Constitution. A determination of this question requires a brief review of the facts:

The plaintiff Marcia Halpern was a patient of the defendant doctor for 10 years, during which period the defendant, an [754]*754obstetrician-gynecologist, delivered all four of the plaintiffs children. He also attended to the plaintiff at regular intervals for routine physical examinations. Concerning the instant matter, the plaintiff complained of a swelling of her right breast. The defendant having noted the enlargement prescribed a diuretic, ascribing the condition to a post-ovulatory swelling. Over the next few months, despite the plaintiffs protestations and concerns over her condition which was worsening, the defendant continued the original treatment, dismissing the possibility of a tumor. More than three months after the original examination, it was definitively diagnosed as a cancerous growth. During the next 18 months the plaintiff underwent two radical mastectomies, an ovariectomy, a series of hospitalizations, massive cobalt treatments and debilitating chemotherapy as a consequence of the metastasis or spread of the cancerous cells. The prognosis of this 37-year-old victim of cancer is regarded as extremely grave.

An action in medical malpractice was brought by both husband and wife as plaintiffs, charging that the defendant departed from accepted medical practices in failing to make a proper diagnosis at the outset and for the grave effects of the disease which it was claimed could have been avoided with early detection and timely treatment.

Thereafter, this matter was presented to a medical malpractice panel in December of 1975, in accordance with the newly enacted legislation effective July 1, 1975. The panel, after a review of the facts presented by both sides, agreed unanimously to a finding of liability. Efforts to dispose of the action by settlement were futile and the matter was advanced for trial to the first day of the January, 1976 term because of plaintiffs grave condition.

During the trial the plaintiff offered the unanimous written recommendation of the medical malpractice panel into evidence. The defendant raised an objection which this court overruled. After a two-week trial the jury returned a total verdict of $175,000 in favor of the plaintiffs. At the trial’s conclusion, the defendant moved to set the verdict aside, raising a constitutional challenge to the new law. In denying the motion, this court did state that it would more fully submit an opinion in support of its denial, it appearing that this was the first case to proceed to conclusion in which the new section set forth earlier was employed. Hence, the following, which will be made part of the record of this action.

[755]*755Subdivision 8 of section 148-a of the Judiciary Law, effective July 1, 1975, reads as follows:

"If the three members of the panel concur as to the question of liability, a formal written recommendation concerning such question of liability shall be signed by the panel members and forwarded to all parties. In such event, the recommendation shall be admissible in evidence at any subsequent trial upon the request of any party to the action. The recommendation shall not be binding upon the jury or, in a case tried without a jury, upon the trial court, but shall be accorded such weight as the jury or the trial court chooses to ascribe to it.

"If the recommendation is read to the jury or by the trial court, the doctor member or the attorney member of the panel, or both of them, may be called as a witness by any party with reference to the recommendation of the panel only. The party calling such witness or witnesses shall pay their reasonable fees and expenses.”

The second paragraph of the subdivision is not initially relevant here, since neither party saw fit to call either of the permitted members of the panel. It bears, however, on the central question of constitutionality as will be seen further in this analysis.

Testing the constitutionality of any given law is difficult and imposes the burden upon the trial court of determining whether certain fundamental constitutional rights are violated. In addressing this issue, an exploration into the precedents which evoked this statute becomes necessary.

At the time the new law was enacted, the citizens of the State of New York were confronted with a serious problem which threatened the very health and well-being of the total community. It appeared that the cost of malpractice insurance to physicians had soared to a point where physicians talked openly of leaving the State in order to avoid prohibitive insurance premiums. Other physicians actually went on strike, refusing to furnish medical care except in extreme emergency, thereby placing the people of the State in great peril. An additional burden was imposed upon the public, since fees which doctors charged their patients were reflective ostensibly of their increased costs. Not only , did this have its effect on depleting resources of individual middle-income citizens who were already suffering from skyrocketing medical costs, but so too, upon government, since a great number of [756]*756indigents come within the protection and care of Federal, State and city agencies. In enacting the changes affecting medical malpractice (of which the new law is but a part) the Legislature enunciated the purpose of its bill, which was "to deal comprehensively with the critical threat to the health and welfare of the State as a result of the lack of adequate medical malpractice insurance coverage at reasonable rates.” (Memorandum of State Executive Dept, NY Legis Ann, 1975, p 419.) As a part of the "medical malpractice package”, there was established a medical malpractice insurance association to provide coverage for physicians at a more moderate rate than that threatened by private insurance companies. In addition, the bill authorized the Administrative Board of the Judicial Conference to promulgate rules and procedures necessary for the prompt disposition of medical malpractice actions. Many reports and studies were submitted to the Legislature to assist it in its consideration of this matter, pointing to the crisis situation and ominous atmosphere which impelled special consideration of this vital societal problem. So, too, did the Governor of the State of New York, upon the signing of this legislation into law, repeat almost in haec verba the above-quoted pronouncement of the Legislature — further proof of the concern that spearheaded the new law.

It came as no surprise. The Legislature had concluded that necessity and the public interest mandated action in this critical period. That some method to reduce the cost of medical malpractice insurance had to be found. That some procedure to expedite the disposition of malpractice cases at an incipient stage, thereby reducing the threat of run-away verdicts with their self-defeating sequelae, had to be employed. It was this latter purpose that mandated the creation of the medical malpractice panel, to the effect that qualified persons could sit together with all counsel in a serious attempt to discover if there was a reasonable basis for the action and if there was a mutual attitude toward amicable adjustment. Following a crash and intensive study, the Legislature conceived the formula.

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Bluebook (online)
85 Misc. 2d 753, 381 N.Y.S.2d 744, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halpern-v-gozan-nysupct-1976.